SBN

CVE-2023-4911 Looney Tunables – Th-Th-That’s Not All, Folks

Vulnerability: Buffer overflow in glibc’s parsing of GLIBC_TUNABLES environment variable

CVE ID: CVE-2023-4911

CVSS Score: 7.8

TuxCare’s Extended LifeCycle Support status can be found in the TuxCare CVE tracker here

In what amounts to a very interesting post-Summer months’ cybersecurity environment, there have been several noteworthy vulnerabilities emerging. Continuing with the (poor) trend of naming vulnerabilities, we now have “ Looney Tunables ,” which impacts glibc’s “GLIBC_TUNABLES” environment variable. It allows for local privilege elevation, and is trivially exploitable with exploit code in the wild.

 

Decoding “Looney Tunables”

 

The “Looney Tunables” vulnerability resides specifically in the ld.so dynamic loader of glibc, a core library that is integral to Linux-based systems, providing fundamental functionalities like open, read, write, and more. This flaw, discovered and disclosed by cybersecurity firm Qualys, pertains to a buffer overflow in the processing of the GLIBC_TUNABLES environment variable, and was unwittingly introduced in a code commit back in April 2021.

 

The GLIBC_TUNABLES environment variable, designed to optimize applications linked with glibc, is a tool for developers and system administrators, ensuring fine-tuning and optimization of applications linked with glibc. However, the exploitation of this variable can have a detrimental impact on system performance, reliability, and security.

 

Distributions at Risk

 

A multitude of major Linux distributions, including but not limited to RHEL 8 and 9, Ubuntu 22.04 and 23.04, and Debian 12 and 13, have been identified as susceptible to this vulnerability. Although the comprehensive list of impacted distributions is still being unveiled, one notable exception is Alpine Linux, which utilizes the musl libc library instead of glibc, rendering it immune to this specific flaw.

 

Potential Impact and Risks

 

The exploitation of “Looney Tunables” could enable threat actors to execute attacker-controlled code, leveraging the GLIBC_TUNABLES environment variable to potentially gain root privileges. This, in turn, could lead to multiple outcomes, from unauthorized data access and manipulation to the deployment of further malicious activities within the compromised system. Given the ubiquity of the distributions involved, the scale of the potential impact is significantly widespread and alarming.

 

Mitigation and Addressing the Threat

 

In response to the identification of this vulnerability, several Linux distributions have issued advisories and mitigation recommendations. Red Hat has released an advisory that provides a temporary mitigation measure. When enabled, this mitigation terminates any setuid program invoked with GLIBC_TUNABLES in the environment, serving as a provisional shield against exploitation. Of course, this has the drawback of interfering with legitimate uses of setuid programs launched through this method.

 

For systems with local user access, the urgency to patch the identified vulnerability cannot be overstated. System administrators and IT professionals are advised to apply available patches and updates expeditiously and to employ recommended mitigation strategies to safeguard systems against potential exploitation. 

 

For systems that do not allow for interactive user access directly, it is still strongly recommended to patch, as the vulnerability may be leveraged as part of an exploit chain and can provide a path to root access in the system, even when the initial vector is a different vulnerability than Looney Tunables.

 

A Final Note on the Naming of Vulnerabilities

 

Assigning names to specific vulnerabilities is a way to draw attention, and artificially emphasize the media attention devoted to those vulnerabilities, but that is done at the expense of attention diverted from other, nameless, vulnerabilities, with just as much risk and exposure that can “fall through the cracks” and remain unpatched. This is a serious concern that can have significant security implications.

 

IT teams are encouraged to look beyond the funny names and logos, and take a more comprehensive approach to patching, where the least important factor should be the name of a vulnerability. In fact, when in doubt, patch everything. If the task feels daunting, contact us and learn how tools like KernelCare Enterprise and Extended Lifecycle Support can help you achieve this coverage with minimal effort and resource allocation.

 

The post CVE-2023-4911 Looney Tunables – Th-Th-That’s Not All, Folks appeared first on TuxCare.

*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from TuxCare authored by Joao Correia. Read the original post at: https://tuxcare.com/blog/cve-2023-4911-looney-tunables-th-th-thats-not-all-folks/